Thomas Land is associate professor of philosophy at the University of Victoria, Canada. His research focuses on Kant’s theoretical philosophy as well as the development of Kantian ideas in contemporary epistemology and philosophy of mind. Publications include “Epistemic Agency and the Self-Knowledge of Reason” (Synthese), “Spatial Representation, Magnitude, and the Two Stems of Cognition” (Canadian Journal of Philosophy), and “Nonconceptualist Readings of Kant and the Transcendental Deduction” (Kantian Review). He is the co-editor of Transparency and Apperception: Exploring the Kantian Roots of a Contemporary Debate (Routledge, 2020) and The Aristotelian Kant (forthcoming from Cambridge UP).

His talk is posted privately in BrightSpace.

In case you are interested, this talk relates to UVic Course, PHIL 201: Critical Thinking, which we offer every semester (sometimes in-person and sometimes asynchronously). I strongly recommend that students in all programs consider taking a course like this.